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  <id>tag:,2009:/1/tag:72.47.210.69,2006://1.4784-</id>
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  <title>Comments for JotSpot to release 30-50 pre-packaged wikis in 2006</title>
  
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    <id>tag:72.47.210.69,2006://1.4784</id>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4784" title="JotSpot to release 30-50 pre-packaged wikis in 2006" />
    <published>2006-03-09T09:42:31Z</published>
    <updated>2007-12-16T23:16:00Z</updated>
    <title>JotSpot to release 30-50 pre-packaged wikis in 2006</title>
    <summary>Today I spoke to JotSpot co-founder and CEO Joe Kraus about their latest product release, pre-packaged &quot;wiki applications&quot;. We also discussed the Web Office, which I will post about separately on ZDNet. JotSpot&apos;s latest product is a prebuilt wiki. Basically it&apos;s a wiki with set templates and functionality, making it easy for people to use...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Richard MacManus</name>
      <uri>http://www.readwriteweb.com</uri>
    </author>
    
    <category term="Web Office" />
    
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      <![CDATA[<p><img alt="jotspot" src="http://readwriteweb.com/images/jotspot-logo.gif" width="207"
height="50" align="left" hspace="5" vspace="5" />Today I spoke to <a
href="http://www.jot.com/">JotSpot</a> co-founder and CEO <a
href="http://bnoopy.typepad.com/bnoopy/">Joe Kraus</a> about their <a
href="http://press.jot.com/archives/2006/03/06/jotspot-launches-wiki-applications/">latest
product release</a>, pre-packaged "wiki applications". We also discussed the Web Office,
which I will post about separately <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/web2explorer/">on
ZDNet</a>. JotSpot's latest product is a prebuilt wiki. Basically it's a wiki with set
templates and functionality, making it easy for people to use 'out of the box' for
specific uses. These so-called "wiki applications" will also have web app-like
functionality such as mashups, calendars, blogging systems, etc. So they are more than
simply wiki pages, they are full-fledged web applications.</p>

<p>The first two products out the door are <a href="http://classreunion.jot.com/">Class
Reunion Planner</a> and <a href="http://bugreporter.jot.com/">Bug Reporter</a>, but Kraus
told me they are planning 30-50 such products this year alone. Plus JotSpot
will be enabling third parties to create custom wiki applications - and onsell them. It's
quite the wiki app ecosystem that JotSpot is planning...</p>

<p><img src="http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/jotspot_class.png" border="0"
alt="jotspot class reunion" width="450" height="302" /><br />
<i>JotSpot Class Reunion Planner</i></p>

<p>JotSpot's company strategy is to be "a platform for building collaborative web
applications". Currently their reputation is as a hosted wiki company, because the wiki
was the first application they rolled out.</p>

<p>During 2005, says Joe, they discovered that
people used their wikis for a lot of different uses. On a personal level they used them
for planning class reunions, family reunions, planning a wedding, making associations,
organizing their sports teams. While on the work level, people used JotSpot wikis in 2005
for things like project management, building an intranet, tracking bugs, running a
recruiting process, as an event calendar, etc. However JotSpot found
that people had problems adapting their wikis for each specific purpose.</p> 
<p>So the theory behind the new pre-packaged wiki applications, is to enable people to utilize wiki technology for
the kinds of use cases Joe outlined above.</p>

<p><img src="http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/jotspot_charts.png" border="0"
alt="jotspot bug tracker" width="452" height="250" /><br />
<i>JotSpot Bug Reporter</i></p>

<p>The <a href="http://bugreporter.jot.com/">Bug Reporter</a> is a fully-functional bug
tracking application, in the form of a wiki. It'll cost $49.95 per month. The <a
href="http://classreunion.jot.com/">JotSpot Class Reunion Planner</a> (cost: $39.95 per
year) seems aimed at the post-Facebook.com crowd, potentially a lucrative business. As
well as enabling the usual wiki functionaility of reading and writing a webpage,
JotSpot's product has links to online maps, blogging tools, and other information from
the Web - such as popular songs and movies from your graduation year (coincidentally the
demo Joe showed me was for 1989, my graduation year from high school -- Paula Abdul and
Milli Vanilli were big back then... um, apparently...).</p>

<p>Tomorrow I'll post the second half of my interview with Joe Kraus, in which we
discussed the Web Office.</p>]]>
      
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